I am thankful for the blessings that the Lord has vouchsafed to bestow
upon His people. If I do not at all times in public express my
gratitude to our heavenly Father, yet I feel grateful and thankful for
all His favors, whether I utter it or not. I have reason to believe
that all the people feel the same, that is, all who feel right, all
the Saints, all who live up to the religion they profess.
We have received many testimonies of the goodness of God, our heavenly
Father, in sickness and in health; He has heard our prayers, and
supplied our wants; in distress He has administered unto us
consolation; and when the light of His Spirit is upon us we comprehend
clearly the dealings of the Lord, but when that Spirit is absent from
us we do not so clearly comprehend His mercies and blessings bestowed
upon us individually, and as a people. I presume that in the order of
the providences of God He has considered it necessary, at times, to
leave His children to themselves, without the aid of any special
influence of the Holy Spirit, that they may learn to comprehend and
appreciate it when bestowed upon them.
For instance, the blessings you enjoy every day for a week, a month,
or a year, you do not prize so highly as you do the blessings you
receive more seldom. Deprive a man of any common article of food, even
the bread you now enjoy, keep it from him for a week, for a month, or
for a year, and when he again obtains it he will appreciate it very
much. It is mea surably so with the Spirit of the Lord; we do not enjoy
it at all times, we do not receive it under all the circumstances of
life, the same as we do under some special condition that we may be
placed in, where we particularly need the Spirit of the Lord to assist us.
We pray for many things; and I have heard some people pray in a manner
that they would be very sorry, in their sober moments, if the Lord
should actually answer their prayers. If the prayers of the people
were written down, so that they could read and reflect upon them, I
have no doubt but what they would wish to have a new edition. I have
heard people pray for the Lord to do this and that; indeed, I have
heard them pray for Him to do a thousand things that they themselves
would not attempt to do; they would consider it degrading to do them;
they would actually consider it sinful to endeavor to accomplish what
they will petition the Almighty to perform for them.
A man's works should agree with his faith; if he has faith to sustain
his works, if he has faith to sustain his deeds, his works should
correspond with his faith. I must be right in my faith, to be right in
my works. If the tree is bitter, the fruit will also be bitter; or in
other words, the tree is known by its fruits, and faith by its works.
If a man's works are good, his faith is also good; if his works are
bad, we infer that his faith is bad also, and very just inferences
too. All men should be judged by their works; this is a
correct criterion to judge every person by. Many of the Latter-day
Saints have correct faith and correct works, while some profess to
have correct faith, but exhibit by their works that their faith is
actually not good. How can I tell whether your faith is good or not? I
can only judge of it by your works.
If your works are good and in accordance with the law of God, with the
Book of Mormon, with the Book of Doctrine and Covenants, and with the
rules of right, I have a right to infer that your faith has produced
the works I behold; that the tree, or stem, if you will allow me the
expression, from which they grew, is a good one. But when we see a
man's works vary with sometimes a little good today and tomorrow, and
perhaps the third day he performs evil, to believe that man is correct
in his faith, in every sense of the word, I cannot.
We speak of faith as the first principle of our religion. If it is the
first principle, other principles grow out of it. We cannot create
principle, we can only discover it. If you were to discover a new
principle, you would err in saying that you had created a principle,
that you had brought one into existence. Principle eternally exists,
and man cannot create it. If you discover any law in mathematics, in
astronomy, or any principle or law connected with the sciences, this
is no proof that you have brought into existence a new law, or process
of law, for the principle existed before you made the discovery.
We have the faculty to make discoveries, we have the faculty to
discover, we have the faculty to learn and understand the first
principles of the doctrines of Christ. Faith, being the first
principle of our religion, is established in the mind by hearing, it
is established in the mind by evidence and by testimony.
I cannot believe everything that my neighbor may wish me to believe, I
cannot always believe to please my neighbor, while I have no evidence
perhaps to believe as he does. I have no testimony to receive what he
has received, and I reject it. My neighbor is then offended, and calls
upon me to have faith, to believe as he does. If he would only produce
sufficient evidence and testimony for me to predicate my faith upon,
to produce in me confidence, or establish in my mind faith, then I
could believe as he does. Faith then comes by hearing testimony, or by
testimony being produced, or brought before the mind.
The testimony you have received of the religion you profess is just as
different as the religion you profess is different from any other
religion. The Methodist, for example, founds his religion upon the
kind of testimony he receives; he is taught by the presiding Elder,
the circuit rider, the local preacher, the class leader, the exhorter,
or some of the lay members, certain principles, or in other words,
testimony is produced to convince him that such and such principles
are right, and his belief is based upon the testimony that he is
capable of receiving and appreciating. Their faith corresponds more or
less with their discipline, or articles of faith; they believe there
is but one God, infinite, eternal, from everlasting to everlasting,
without body, parts, or passions. Their testimony for that belief is
only to be found in their discipline and traditions, and has been
handed down from father to son, from their grandmother the Church of
Rome to their mother the Church of England; they actually believe it,
write it, and publish it abroad.
Their notions of sprinkling, pouring, and other works we might
mention, correspond with their belief. If they believed it right for a
man to be invariably immersed, they would teach him so; if they
believed it right for a man to be baptized only by pouring,
they would teach him so; if they believed it right for a man to be
sprinkled to answer the requirements of heaven, they would teach him
so. Hence you discover that their works would correspond with their
faith; if they had no faith, they could not believe either in
immersion, sprinkling, or pouring. If a believer in immersion, he will
practice it, his works will correspond with his faith, and he will go
forth and be immersed. How do you know he believes in baptism by
immersion? By his works. What evidence have you that that person
believes in immersion? "Why," says my brother, "I was present when he
was immersed; I heard him tell the Elder, or the Priest, that he
required immersion at his hands, and he went forth and backed up his
faith in it by his works." This would be correct reasoning. "But,"
says one, "I believe in having water poured upon my head." "How do you
know he believes this?" "I was present, and heard him require the
Priest, or Elder, to pour water upon him, and the Priest complied with
his wishes, and his works proved to me that he believed in pouring."
Another one says to the Priest, "I wish you to sprinkle me, I require
this because I believe that sprinkling is the best mode." What
evidence have you that this man believes in sprinkling? His works
prove it. The simple fact that you were present and saw him sprinkled,
or heard him request the administration of the rite, convinces you
that he had a certain kind or species of faith. Do all people have one
faith? No, and their works are as varied as their faith. If there are
diverse kinds of faith, there must be diverse kinds of works.
If there is but one faith, there can be but one mode of baptism. Dr.
Clark asserts positively that the Colossians were buried with Christ
in baptism, that is, they were actually immersed. He says the Greek
Testament reads that they were immersed, plunged, buried, that they
were covered up. How do you know anything about the Colossians? What
process of reasoning would you pursue, to lead you to the conclusion
that the Colossians believed in immersion as the only mode? That they
were actually buried in water? Again, if you inquire whether the
Corinthians were sprinkled, how would you know their faith? Says one,
"I would know it by their works, for I know that their works would
correspond with their faith. And if the Ephesians had the ordinance
administered by pouring, I should know it by their works." What does
the Bible tell you? That there is one faith, one Lord, and one
baptism.
If the Catholics had the same faith that the Colossians had, could
they pour or sprinkle? Certainly not. If you say that one portion of
the people of God are poured, another portion sprinkled, and another
immersed, you introduce schism and false doctrine, and then different
works follow. As quick as you have the Colossians immersed, the
Corinthians poured, and the Ephesians sprinkled, you introduce the
doing of three kinds of labor. But if there is one faith, and they all
had the right kind of faith, if they had all attained to the like
precious faith delivered to the Saints, and one portion was immersed,
then the balance were immersed also. If the fact can be established
that one portion of the Christian Church was immersed, it will
establish the fact, beyond the shadow of a doubt, that all the rest
were administered to in the same way. The people of God are under the
necessity of having like precious faith, and their works therefore
would also have to agree. If Dr. Clark was correct, and I have no
reason to dispute the learned doctor, that the Colossians were
immersed, the balance of the people of God in all the ancient
Church were also immersed. If they had but the one faith, it is
impossible to introduce pouring and sprinkling. If you introduce
pouring, then they had the pouring faith; if sprinkling, the
sprinkling faith. But if you prove that one portion was immersed, you
prove that they had the like precious faith, and the rest must of
necessity be immersed. This is the way I reason upon the subject.
Again, if they were immersed, they were confirmed by the laying on of
hands, as you learn by the same Scripture. If the ancient Saints
believed it necessary to lay on hands, and the Latter-day Saints
should believe it to be unnecessary to lay on hands, how could you
make your faith agree with theirs? How could you introduce a new
doctrine and argument, and reconcile your faith with theirs? They
actually believed in the laying on of hands in confirmation for the
reception of the Holy Ghost.
The Methodists, Baptists, Presbyterians, Church of England, all
believe that was the practice of the ancient Saints. All who believe
in the Bible will agree that that was the faith of the ancients as
exhibited in their works; therefore if any of the modern Christians
reject it, we have a right to assert that their faith is known by
their works. We have a right to say that their faith agrees not with
that of the ancients. But my faith agrees with that of the ancients. I
believe and practice the very works which they practiced. I believe in
baptism for the remission of sins, and the laying on of hands for the
reception of the Holy Ghost, and, if any are sick among you, in
sending for the Elders of the Church, in anointing the sick with oil,
and in praying for them, that they may be healed.
Now I want to dwell a little upon this point. I do not know but some
use the ordinances of God too com monly, and on too slight occasions.
Some, if they get a sliver in their finger, will call for the laying
on of hands and for prayer to cure the wound; or if they get a little
gravel or dust in their eye, they will want you to lay hands on them
to eradicate it; and so of other little complaints for which we
already have simple and known remedies. I do not wish to teach this,
but I wish to teach you the doctrine of the Bible. "Is any sick among
you? let him call for the elders of the church; and let them pray over
him, anointing him with oil in the name of the Lord: And the prayer of
faith shall save the sick, and the Lord shall raise him up; and if he
have committed sins, they shall be forgiven him." This is the doctrine
of the Bible, mark the words. If any of the Apostles are sick, let
them send for some of the rest of the Apostles, and let their brethren
Apostles administer to them, and they shall be healed; the Bible does
not read thus. It does not read that only the renowned in the Church
shall reap the benefits of this institution, but it says, "Is any sick
among you?" &c. Suppose God has a true Church upon the earth in this
age, what mode would that Church adopt in case any were sick? Says
one, "If they had the same faith as the ancients, they would perform
the same works." How shall we ascertain whether the Latter-day Saints
have the like precious faith with the Apostles? You know that the
Apostles said they had the like precious faith. How are we to
ascertain that we have it? If any are sick among you, you will send
for the Elders of the Church, and let them anoint you with oil in the
name of the Lord, and the prayer of faith shall save the sick.
You see at once that it is necessary for your works to correspond, and
for you to send for the Elders of the Church. Do you see this
practiced among the Latter-day Saints? Some of them must first
try the physician, have the head shaved, take a dose of calomel and
gamboge, have a blister plaster on the back of the neck, and another
all over the bowels, besides one on each hip—in short, they must have
six or eight large blister plasters on them at once. After trying all
this, and running up a bill with a physician of from six to six
hundred dollars, they then send for the Elders. When James is about
dead, having had two quarts of blood taken from him on Saturday, and
another on Monday, and when the life is nearly drawn out of the poor
fellow by physicking and bleeding, why then they send for the Elders,
and ask them to pray for him. When a man or woman sends for me after
taking such a course I feel insulted, if I do not act so. I go to the
house perfectly good natured apparently, and administer, but there is
a frown of indignation within me. I feel that they have insulted the
Priesthood, trampled upon the order of the house of God, and treated
lightly His holy ordinances. I am not anxious to exercise faith for
such persons, for I think that they are fools, and let them die the
fool's death.
If the Saints of God actually have the faith of the ancients, let them
practice the doctrine in their works. A man will tell me that he is a
"Mormon," that he believes in the faith of the ancients, when at the
same time he practices everything else but their religion. My rule is
to practice our religion. If I want a drink of catnip tea, or of
composition, or of lobelia, it is all right, but I will first practice
my religion. You know that it is hardly allowable in Utah to drink any
more than five gallons of lobelia at once, for the Assembly of Deseret
once had the matter under consideration.
I wish to see the Saints practice their religion, and carry it out,
and if they cannot live by their religion, then die by it. That is the
doctrine. I want my religion if I am going to die. Most certainly that
is the time I would not like to lay it by, for it would be unwise to
do that, since that is the very time that one needs it the most, and
is the time when he should be immersed in it. I want to see the Saints
actually show by their works that they have the faith of the ancients.
When the Elders go forth to preach, and people are healed by the
laying on of hands, some have said, "We cannot expect the sick to be
healed in Zion; we cannot expect to see miracles when we are gathered
to Zion." That is the very place for the sick to be healed, and the
place where the people of God should exercise the most faith, and be
the most diligent in keeping the ordinances of the Lord's house
perfectly. You have only heard the theory taught abroad, but you have
now come home to practice what you have been taught in other lands.
If any are sick among you, let them send for the Elders of the Church
to pray for them, and to lay their hands upon them, anointing them
with oil in the name of the Lord, and the prayer of faith shall save
the sick. People neglect to anoint with oil when they should and might
use it. I have seen the Elders try to cast out devils, and to
accomplish it they have fasted, and prayed, and laid on hands, and
rebuked the devil, but he would not go out. I have then seen them
bring consecrated oil, and anoint the person possessed of the devil,
and the devil went out forthwith. That taught me a good lesson—that
God Almighty, when He speaks, means what He says; and if a man's works
are right, his faith will be right; and if his faith is wrong, his
works are wrong. When a man whose faith is right goes forth to
ad minister to the sick, he will anoint with oil, as well as
lay on his hands and pray. Unless you anoint with oil, your prayers
will not rise higher than the fog, and you know that it seldom rises
much higher than the tops of the mountains.
If I am sick, and send for an administrator, I want him to fulfil
every word of the Lord; and if there is anybody there you don't like
when you come to me, invite them out of the door. When devils are in
the house, and you don't like them, cast them out, but be sure to
administer the ordinances right. When an Elder comes to administer to
the sick, and is afraid of greasing his fingers, or of dropping a
little oil on his vest or pants, and says, "O never mind the oil,
there is no virtue in the olive oil; you might as well drink it as
anoint with it; besides, I might grease my gloves; I will dispense
with it," I want such a man to walk off. If I was sick, and he came to
me in that manner, I should say, "You are a poor, miserable
hypocrite." That is the way I should feel and talk. Let a man, when he
has the right kind of faith, practice the works thereof; and when God
says, "Anoint with oil," anoint; I don't care if it runs down your
beard as it ran down Aaron's, it will not hurt you. When a man
complies with every requisition of heaven, his works and his faith are
right. He offers up prayer for the sick, he anoints with oil, and lays
on his hands. When his works are right they will correspond with his
faith, and men and women will be healed.
This is just as sure as the law of mathematics; I never saw it fail,
and it never will fail; I tell you this in the name of the Lord God of
Israel. The grand difficulty is, as brother Kimball says, people play
with these things as a cat does with a mouse until it is dead; and so
it will be with the ordinances of God when a part of them only are
performed and a part omitted, for in this way the channel of the
Lord's blessings is stopped up. The Saints who are sick need not
expect that they are going to be healthy when only half of the
ordinance is administered to them. If a man wishes to be healed, he
must be administered to lawfully in that way God has appointed, and
live his religion.
A great many people partake of the Sacrament, and at the same time are
thinking, "How many teams can I get tomorrow to haul stone? I wonder
if that sister has a bonnet like mine, or if I can get one like hers?
I wonder if it is going to be a good day tomorrow, or whether it will
rain or snow?" &c. You can sit in this stand and read such thoughts in
their faces. When a sick person has sent in a request for the prayers
of this congregation, many are permitting their thoughts to wander all
over creation. Do we not see this right here? Yes, and a man of God
feels indignant at it. No matter who is called upon to pray, all the
assembly should unite in one; every person in the congregation who
have an interest at the throne of grace should engage in prayer, and
raise their hearts, as the heart of one man, to the Almighty, for the
blessings desired, and in offering thanks for the blessings enjoyed.
We talk about being one; now if our faith is right, let our works
correspond. If you have faith to pray, and prayer is offered up in the
stand, pray too; and if you cannot confine your thoughts in any other
way, mentally repeat the prayer of the one who is praying aloud, word
for word, and let every Saint of God pray when the hour of prayer
comes. When prayer is offered up in this manner to the God of high
heaven for the sick and afflicted, you will find that the sick will be
healed, for the prayers of the people of God ascend as incense before Him, and He has decreed that He will answer their prayers
because they are united. When a sick person sends a request here for
the benefit of our prayers, it is not sent that one man alone may pray
for that person, but that the prayers of the assembled Saints,
individually and collectively, may be offered up for that person.
Hence every one in the Tabernacle of the righteous should lift up his
voice and pray for that sick person, it is your duty to do it. And
when you partake of the Sacrament, you should discern the Lord's body,
and believe that, by the virtue of his sufferings, blood, and death,
you are redeemed. You should realize that it is no little, trifling
ordinance, but was instituted by the great God for the benefit of His
people, and to commemorate and perpetuate the sufferings and death of
His Son.
I wish to call upon you to be faithful, to have the right kind of
faith, and to exhibit it by your works. What is the testimony of the
Latter-day Saints? Our religion is as different from other people's
religion as our testimony is different from theirs. When Joseph Smith
bore testimony, he told the people that an angel from high heaven had
spoken to him, that he had been ordained by authority from Jesus
Christ, and sent forth to preach the Gospel. Did you ever hear the
Methodists bear such a testimony? If not, how can you expect them to
have such faith as the man who believes the testimony of Joseph Smith?
The Methodists have no such testimony, only as they have it from the
Latter-day Saints. Joseph also said that he had seen the dark regions
of Hades; did you ever hear a Methodist bear that testimony? No. Here
are Elders of Israel who have seen company after company of angels,
who have seen the sick healed, the ears of the deaf unstopped, the
tongue of the dumb loosed, and the eyes of the blind opened. You will
hear them testify that they have seen the glory of God; and that by
the spirit of prophecy, they have seen war, pestilence, and famine
coming upon the earth. The Methodists do not pretend to have such
testimony, and of course have not such faith. You may go to any sect
you please upon the earth, and their faith corresponds with their
testimony, more or less.
The Latter-day Saints have testimony, and faith comes to them by
hearing the word of God, but it comes to others by hearing the words
of men.
We have testimony that Christ lives, and sits on the right hand of
God, that angels have administered to the children of men on earth,
and that our God hears and answers our prayers. Our faith is different
and our testimony is different, from the rest of the professing world,
and, in order to have them agree with us, they have to hear and
receive the same testimony, the same doctrine, and the same weight of
argument that we have, for faith comes by hearing the word of God. The
people of God in these last days differ from other sects of
religionists. How can it be otherwise, when our testimony is so
different, when the first proclamation we heard was so different, when
the restoration of the Book of Mormon, its translation by the use of
the Urim and Thummim, the gifts and blessings of the Holy Ghost, the
administration of angels, and everything connected with our religion,
are so different from that to which the world have been accustomed?
They believe that calomel will heal the sick—we believe not, but that
the anointing with oil and laying on of hands will; and we practice
accordingly.
It is no wonder that the Latter-day Saints believe differently from
other folks, for their works are different, and their testimony is
different. We believe in gathering together; the Lord God has spoken
to us from the heavens and commanded us to gather. They do not
believe in gathering to where the Almighty can talk to them; they do
not even pray for the Lord to send an angel to speak to them. The
Latter-day Saints try to live their religion, that they may converse
with angels, receive the administration of holy messengers from the
throne of God, be sanctified in their spirits, affections, and all
their desires, that the Holy Ghost may rest upon them, and their
hearts be filled therewith, and become competent to bear the presence
of angels.
May the Lord bless you, and wake you up upon these points of doctrine,
that your faith and works may ever correspond, and that your blessings
be equal with those of the ancient people of God, in the name of Jesus
Christ our Lord. Amen.
- Jedediah M. Grant